Notes and Editorial Reviews

Young Capuçons meet late Brahms and the brothers have a real winner here

Here is a Double Concerto to listen to again and again. Not least because it is rather unusual. The Capuçon brothers are accomplished chamber musicians and they often dig into this music as though in a chamber concert, taking time to explore, passing ideas between themselves. It doesn’t displace the recent Fischer/Müller-Schott, but sits alongside, totally different and complementary.

-- Gramophone [2/2008]

One of the essential purchases of 2007.

The brothers Capuçon are a force of nature. Their new accountRead more of the Brahms Double Concerto radiates a gripping intensity matched by no other in the catalogue. Usually when comparing a new recording of this piece to my benchmark recordings – Oistrakh with Fournier and Oistrakh with Rostropovich – I soon begin to feel sorry for the newcomer. Not so here. Renaud and Gautier Capuçon yield nothing to the most exalted competition.

From the bold, quasi-improvisatory first statement of Gautier Capuçon's cello, it is clear that autumnal sentiment is to play no part in this performance. Where Fournier is aristocratic and Rostropovich commanding, Gautier Capuçon is brooding and feisty, his tone like a rich port wine. His brother is hardly less passionate, and when he joins the fray then the brothers begin to strike sparks off one another, and the orchestra. The outer movements surge with wild abandon, and the central movement heaves and sighs with passionate longing. Every phrase is surprising here, emerging with the freshness of new adventure.

I compared this performance to the recent account from Julia Fischer and Daniel Müller-Schott on Pentatone. The contrast is telling. The Pentatone performance is very good, and has a lovely lightness to the interplay between the soloists. It demonstrates emphatically, though, the greater maturity of the Capuçons' conception of the piece, for all the impetuosity of their performance.

They are aided and abetted by a sympathetic Myung-Whun Chung, who leads the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester with great dramatic flair. While the music gushes forth with unstoppable momentum, he never allows the accompaniment to become insensitive, and coaxes some gorgeous detail from his players. The clarinet, for example, conjures a moment of repose at about 6:30 into the first movement that is meltingly beautiful.

The liner-notes suggest that the Double Concerto was pieced together from three separate concert performances given over three days in April this year in three different venues. Be not afraid, though. Michael Seberich's engineering presents a seamless, warm acoustic. There are no audience noises to speak of either.

The coupling for the Double Concerto is unusual and generous. Rather than offering up another Beethoven Triple or a solo turn for Renaud in the Brahms violin concerto, the brothers team up with the other members of their quartet and the clarinetist Paul Meyer for a glorious reading of the Brahms clarinet quintet. Dating from roughly the same time in Brahms' life, it makes a perfect disc mate and the performance is every bit as committed. Renaud leads the quartet with style and Gautier supplies a rock solid bass. The other members of their quartet match their intensity, as does the fantastic Paul Meyer, whose virtuosity is as impressive as his melted-butter tone is glorious.

The excellent liner notes may quote Claude Rostand's assessment of this piece as “a great, resigned confession, steeped in a melodic atmosphere full of tenderness”, but this performance sparkles with a fresh vitality that makes you sit up and take fresh notice of this gorgeous piece.

The studio recording is expertly balanced, this time by Michel Pierre.

No matter how many recordings of these pieces you have in your collection, you need to buy this disc. It is one of the essential purchases of 2007.

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